What’s causing the alarming rise in cancer for adults under 50

Certain cancers are striking earlier than they used to.

Cancer is a life-altering condition, especially if you’re diagnosed when most of your life lies ahead of you. Luckily, just 9% of the nearly 2 million new cases of cancer each year occur in people 45 or younger. However, according to a recent study published in Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology, that proportion is unfortunately increasing.

The researchers behind it, based out of Harvard University’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, looked at global data for 14 cancers previously identified as increasing in prevalence amongst people aged 50 or younger: breast, colorectal, endometrium, oesophagus, extrahepatic bile duct, gallbladder, head and neck, kidney, liver, bone marrow, pancreas, prostate, stomach, and thyroid.

“We found that this risk is increasing with each generation. For instance, people born in 1960 experienced higher cancer risk before they turn 50 than people born in 1950 and we predict that this risk level will continue to climb in successive generations,” said senior author Shuji Ogino, MD, PhD, a Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

Cancer incidence rates by age at diagnosis, all cancer types. Rates have been rising in the young while falling for the old. Source: SEER 21 2013–2017, all races, both sexes. (Credit: National Cancer Institute)

Increased cancer screening undoubtedly contributes to some of the rise in diagnoses, but it doesn’t account for all of it — especially considering that screening still is relatively uncommon amongst younger adults compared to older ones.

The most likely culprits are dietary and lifestyle changes that have accumulated over the past half-century, the researchers say. Globally, people are now much more likely to be sedentary from a young age and to consume a Western-style diet, one high in saturated fats, red meat, processed food, and sugar, but low in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and fiber.

As a result, worldwide obesity has nearly tripled since 1975, according to the World Health Organization, and youth obesity has risen even more rapidly. Per-capita alcohol consumption has also climbed in many parts of the world. Rising antibiotic use may also factor in to increased rates of early cancer. Though they are invaluable for treating bacterial infections, antibiotics can mess with humans’ intestinal microbiomes, especially when overused. Over the past decades, we’ve learned that healthy, balanced gut bacteria communities reduce cancer rates.

Considering that most of these altered lifestyle factors have to do with what we put in our mouths, it’s unsurprising that eight of the 14 cancers increasing in incidence among under-50s relate to the digestive system, the researchers note.

Take colorectal cancer, for example. The American Cancer Society reported earlier this year that “people born in 1990 have double the risk of colon cancer and quadruple the risk of rectal cancer as people born in 1950.” Moreover, as Tina Donvito wrote for Keck Medicine at USC, “the most recent data, which tracked the incidence of colorectal cancer from 2011 to 2016, revealed an up to 2% per year increase among people under 50.” In 2020, there were about 18,000 cases of colorectal cancer diagnosed in Americans under 50.

Considering that cancer screening is infrequent for people under 50 compared to older adults, a lot of these cancers are caught at later stages, complicating treatments and reducing survivability, the Harvard researchers warn.

While cancer rates are regrettably rising for younger adults, overall, cancer death rates are falling, at least in the United States. Large declines in smoking are drastically reducing deaths from lung cancer. Increased use of sunscreen has prevented tens of thousands of cases of melanoma. Better screening techniques are catching cancers earlier, improving prognoses. And revolutionary new treatments are helping people live for much longer after they are diagnosed.

So the good news is that we are lessening the burden of cancer overall. But as this study indicates, if we aren’t careful, we could offset those gains through our cancer-promoting, self-destructive lifestyle choices.

This article was reprinted with permission of Big Think, where it was originally published.

Related
Are microplastics really destroying our health?
Scientists still don’t know how microplastics impact human health, but they do have ideas for stopping their spread.
The exciting research that may cure Parkinson’s 
GeneCode is developing a drug it hopes won’t just alleviate Parkinson’s symptoms but also protect and restore patient’s neural health.
Potato chips or heroin? The debate on social media and mental health
Experts disagree on whether social media causes mental health issues in adolescents despite looking at the same data. Here’s why.
How smart devices helped me unlock hidden health wins
By measuring many different body metrics, smart health devices can help support the mental game as much as the physical fitness gains.
Ray Kurzweil explains how AI makes radical life extension possible
Life expectancy gains in developed countries have slowed in recent decades, but AI may be poised to transform medicine as we know it.
Up Next
Exit mobile version